Infections of Populations: History and Epidemiology Flashcards

1
Q

What are some reasons for seasonal variability n certain viral infection prevalence?

A

virus stability at different temperatures/ humidity levels

Change in human behaviour - e.g indoor during winter

Vector life cycle - e.g mosquitoes during rainy season

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2
Q

What are Koch’s postulates?

A

microorganism is associated regularly with disease

microorganism isolated from diseased host

if microorganism inoculated into a new host, it should cause disease

microorganism can then be isolated from this second host

Not necessarily as applicable to viruses.
- very often viral infections may not cause disease
- Viruses such as HPV/ HBV cannot be cultured in cell lines

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3
Q

What is the definition of incidence

A

Number of new cases, within a population, in a specified time

e.g Influenza 10 cases/ 1000 people/ year

Usually most useful for describing acute infections

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4
Q

What is definition of prevalence

A

Number of current cases, at one moment in time

Usually most useful for describing chronic infections, in which disease onset is not easily determined

High incidence + low prevalence - e.g Influenza - people who are infected recover quickly or die. So we have lots of new cases, but not that many cases long-term

Low incidence + high prevalence - e.g HBV - chronic infection, not many people infected in short time, but overall a lot of cases

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5
Q

What is definition of prevalence

A

Number of current cases, at one moment in time

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6
Q

Town with 100 000 residents
Virus causes infection of 10 000 people
7000 people develop illness
500 people die of infection

What is the incidence?

A

10%

The incidence of this infection is the number of people infected divided by
the population (10,000/100,000, or 10%).

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7
Q

Town with 100 000 residents
Virus causes infection of 10 000 people
7000 people develop illness
500 people die of infection

What is the morbidity?

A

Morbidity is the number of individuals who became ill divided by the number of infected individuals (7,000/10,000, or 70%).

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8
Q

Town with 100 000 residents
Virus causes infection of 10 000 people
7000 people develop illness
500 people die of infection

What is the mortality rate?

A

Mortality is the number of deaths divided by the number infected (500/10,000,
or 5%).

Basically - if you get infected, how likely are you to die?

This is different to case-fatality ratio

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9
Q

Town with 100 000 residents
Virus causes infection of 10 000 people
7000 people develop illness
500 people die of infection

What is the case-fatality ratio?

A

The case-fatality ratio is the number of deaths divided by the number of individuals with illness (500/7,000, or 7.1%).

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10
Q

What are explanations for seasonal variation in some infections?

A

Population density - crowding during winter or on cruise ships

Vector life cycle - e.g summer allows mosquitoes to breed in Europe, where they die off during winter

Climate - change allows vectors/ hosts to migrate. Dry/cold can help influenza virus survive longer on surgaces

Host changes - possible that changes in host circadian rhythm, or mucosal surface thickness changes in summer/ winter may affect host susceptibility. Cold winter could dry human skin, and allow mucosa to be breached by virus

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11
Q

What are physiological differences that can influence risk of infection?

A

Male more likely to have infections - unclear why. Possible hormonal changes

Infants less likely to have severe disease - e.g rubella, VZV, HBV - likely poor immune response

Malnutrition - unable to fight off infection. E.g protein/ vit A deficiency increasing measles mortality

Individual changes- e.g CCR5 deficiency in HIV

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